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2 WON".e the number of cups in apound A'"cd the best coffee you ever drank We guarantee that for Luzianne. If it does not prove out on both points after you have used the entire con tents of one can according to direc tions, tell the g'rocer you want your money back and he'll return it with out a qtsestion. Buy this better coffee today. Write foi premium catalog. 'The Reily/T Co. New Orleans 'jL1J2zMNNM COFFEE HSpringtime Isl ere!| and my Spring.G6ods are already arriving. Comic along and get first choice. I shall continue to sell winter weight goods at reduced prices. On account of limited space I can't give many quotations on prices; so come, give us a trial and be convinced. I now have the largest line of Ladies' and . Men's Slippers that I have ever carried. I will sell J. & P. Coats' Crochet Thread, numbers up to 25, three ballsifor 25 cents, and higher numbers for io cents per ball. Laidies' Shirtwaists at 50 cents each. Nice line of Ladies' and Children's Hats just received. I am still paying 1 4c per pound cash and i 5c per pound in trade for I lams inside 25 pounds in weight. Bring me your Hens and Eggs and get ; oc per pound tor the Hens and the Greenville market price for Eggs. J. W. HENDRICKS PICKENS R4 I We Mammoth Yellow SPCA NOIE So.ja B~ean~ ~ 'i,.rIiiti I~ promises to be one of the most .'''OIUitfI profitable crops for sou thern farm era everywhere. Make s a large Ia itdV ntrpCleegt~U yield of beans, which are readily ae ftev*v~t~eprecwse &alable for oil-producing and food t ec narrisho o w purposes, in addition to its use for mnh~tk ~ Alrs:Ms forage, s~oll-improving and stock lv: ogNetMilisc.5 feeding. Splendidly adapted to our southern soils and climrate.I~t-*I 'd e~cr Gnil The New 100-Day m eineIeadirtund4 V elv e t B e ani ni~ jfj..~ the quitA~t growing of 'e lvet empromise to sup~ercede Cowv P4~na 'amt- ac ~i .evry largely as a soil-improv- ~t tcLol~yo otnYm f( mg. fr--ge and grazing crop iimtI'tt)11ns, 1.5pr10 . thrToughout the South. C:heaper lrg r(1 tttischae.O erJffl. to eed per ser than co peas.cnu fe.FrdN. ~etoPn SWrit foir prices and "Wo c rmte'sord. 9 Crop Special" gi ving full in- D4u~I.Ieo;nql(msfr0I l~tordon in re-gard to Soja and ;g o eieyaotArl2.Pr Vstvet Beans, Cow Peas, MIleet, Hrfr ulcl o ~l toc.0 Kesd Comea, Sorghums, Sudan L riCnrlI.FD o ;L I Grass, t. !4died free. rg, renil,.C.4t T.W.WOOD & SONS, ~ ;ay n rne ali toy.ud~ Watte-ini !othP Cleegau Ke w eParm twleyacy xeinewse heNaQulty teach Stoarerlsho o w ( Yumonthnyc his summer. Adres Ms Olv ogsN wo, uln, ..5 ot-Inradbtee renil and Fasle nerLte laeaete PRSONAL Rev. F. S. Childrea will "preach a Keowee church next Sunday, April 8,0 Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith of Easle; dined st 9. E. Mauldin's Sunday. Born to Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Garrick of asley route 1, Monday April 17, boy. Miss Olive Gillespie spent severa days recently with her sister, Mrs. R B. Byars, 1. D. McJunkin of the upper part o0 the county was in town on business on( day last week. Mr. and Mis. N. A. Christopher vis ited friends and relatives in the Need. more section last week. Miss Marie Freeman of Pickens waf the guest of Misses Pearla and Susi( Hester at G. W. C. last week-end.: hee will be a home-coming at Keo .wee church the .first Sunday in May. All old members especially.invited. Dr. W. M. Ponder 'and Mr. Mark 1int prominent citizens of Dacusvile were in Pickens on business Monday. Dr. J. L. Valley attended the annual meeting of the State Medical Associa tion which was held in Charleston last week. A number of visitors attended the township singing convention which met with the 'naptist3.church hereFSunday afternoon. Mrs. .1. M. Gillespie of Pickens was called to Columbia last week on account of sickness in the family of her son, Leo D. Gillespie. We regret to state that Miss Minnie Ilerd has been very sick since she re turned from Montvale school where she taught the winter term. Mr. and Mrs. H1. A. Jennings and lit tle daughter Mary Parallee, and Miss Mae Griffin of Greenville spent Sunday with relatives in Pickens. The egg hunt at Enon on Saturday afternoon was quite a success and the little folks were delighted.witha.treat of candy by Mr. Mauldin. The Entre Nous club was delightfully entertained last Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. C. B. Hagood at her beautiful suburban home. Delicious re 'reshments of' sandwiches, salad, orange sherbet and salted almonds were served. Miss Sara Whatley of Mauldin and Misses Annie Bell Riser, of Leesville, and Nannie Porter of Pickens, who are teachers in the Mauldin school, spent Sunday with Miss Porter's parents, Dr. and Mrs. F. S. Porter, in Pickens. Henry C. Tillman is announced in The Sentinel this week as a candidate for Congress from this district. Mr. Till than is a son of Senator lien Tillman and is a leading lawver o( Greenwood. We are not personally acquainted with him. but he is said to be a very esti mable gentleman and worthy and able to represent this dlistrict in Congress. Norman Crane (colored), son of' John Cratne of Central was killed near C'en tral last Moniday. It was reported that he e'vidently jumped from at freight train, just as it was entering the townz corporate limits. T[he negro had been working for Mr. WValter Earl and is sup~posedl to have been stealing it ride when his death occurred. -Liberty Ga z.ette. Married, on Saturday. April 15, at the residence of' the oftliiciating notary public, Jas. II. Ilunnicutt, of the Oco noe Creek section, Miss Bertha lland aind Eddie Anderson, of' Pickens county. T1he bride is the daughter of .1 . Quince Ihand, of' the Ebeneze'r section of' )c( nee. TIhe' Courir jioins wvithi mam friends ini extendling best wishers to this happy young coule.-K eowe'e Courier. Whiie enlgagedi in cleaning out o~ld Carmel church a f'ew datys ago, oney of the ladies found an old envelope stick. ing in a crack of the pew that f'or many yeats was occupied by the late .John Walker, of Double Branches, which con tained besides a letter to Mrs. Walker from her nephew, the late .John S. Byrd, of Charleston, S. C., a couple of nation a) bank bills, one $20 and the other a $10 bill. Trhe letter was dated in 1884, one of the bills was dated in 1862. The lady who found it, we are told turned the money' over to the chur'ch tre'asurevr. - asley Progress. New Pressing Club 1 llAVE installed a first-class pressiny J. and cleaning outfit in the remr of my barber shop and will appreciate your business in this line. Suits are sent for yid delivered when promised and work is donie by first-class workman under my supervision. Work guarantceed. Suits pressed at 25e per suit; eleaning atnd pressing, 50e suit; dry cleaning, $1 ut.Sp eial attention given to ladies B. B. PORTER, Pickens, S. C Porter's Barber Shop Next Door to KeoWee Bank Pickens, S. C. The place *to get your barbei *oik done if you want it righ davI%'Iini airtI 11)4n, shu ,nomg. aln'ag1 mn ,4Ing'hunk, eit.. 11,'lon by , hnl~hor' whoi knuow I Iwi tilaieA ii at rettsonshhg. ' piIe"s ning ~ . pctt *, Gv a r Such tobacco enjoyment as you never thought could be is yours to command quick as you buy some Prince / Albert and fire-up a pipe or a home.made cigarette! Prince Albert gives you every tobacco sat isfaction your smoke- ~ appetite ever hankered - for. That's because it's made by a patented process that cuts out .. * bite and parch! Prince Albert has always ha h been sold without coupons or premiums. -agk r pip e whe A 0 We prefer to give quality I ~R1NGE ALBERT the national joy amoke has a flavor as different as it is delightful. You never tgs fed the like of it/ And that isn't strange, either. Men who think they can't smoke a pipe or roll a ciga Buy Ptoce Alert every- rette can smoke and will smoke if they use Prince where tobacco is sold im toppy red bag, 5c; tidy red Albert. And smokers who have not yet given P. A. a try tin. 1Oc; handsome pound out certainly have a big surprise and a lot of enjoyment and half-pound tin humi dors-and-that corking fine coming their way as soon as they invest in a supply. pound crystal-glass humi- Prince Albert tobacco will tell its own story I dor with sponge-moistener top that keeps the tobacco RY OD O A C .c i.,uchcl,er,*"m-alw.y, R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. Miss Etta Boyd of G. W. C. spent Stores Will Close at 6.30 the week-end as the guest of Miss.Eva . Holder of Pickens . ~ .. We, the undersigned merchants of N OT I C E The big One-Cent sale i n j pickens, agree to close our stores at Write me and I will explain gress at the Pickens Drug Store. ake 6.30 p. m. with the exception of Satur- how I was cured in 4 days of a out a list of the things you want from days and payday at the cotton mill, be- severe caseofPilesof40years' the aivertisement appearing in .The ginning May 1 and ending September staneins o Pinofer Sentinel. 15, 1916- 1 atanding without pain, knife or 'nil.1 , 1-: detention from business. No The twenty-seventh session of the Folger, Thornley & Co., lI.A.Richey, one need suffer from this dis North Greenville Academy, Greenville L. Copel, T. D. Harris, B. F. Parsons, ease when this humane cure county, closed April 21 after a success- Morris & Co., B. S. Johnson, Pickens.. can be had right here in South ful terin under the principalship ofkRev. Hardware & Grocery Co., Craig' Bros. Carolina. R. M. JOSEY L. K. Simpson. Four Piekens covnty Co., Hobbs-Henderson Co. R 4 students graduated from this schooi. Route 4. Lamar, S. C. They are as follows: Miss Nannie E. -. . = loleombe, from Easley; Misses Ethel Cross Plains Club Meeting RSM omw om .ones and .J.essie Alexander, from Con- - tral. and r. L. Looper from Dauusville. ie rs s as D'eiooratie n in b mets atur. d* ia oeiti rid orgaRel liy viet-t h e You Can't.Tel By the Mrs. Sallie Wiiard Gary died alt 1 in tlanta, G. Sunday, Apr. ic-e-presitentL: NI.% Weley,crtairty-treisurr. f 0r d ag 23. aged (3 years. H er body wa Ni. W. hMe'ter, .1. (. .etuwm, .A. w. -rsannery an'! The number of feet he can jump brought to Liberty, her old home, on t 1-. i eaty wereelce c-ncucut That's a business he knows~ April 25, and a f ter funeral services con \"" ,t "'.i'er iif. it..a~oisifIht'ti'eia ,s,. Which he doesn't, disclose, chuetedl by Rev. D). WV. 1 iott in the Bap- as otne or the niewipapers terma it,the r- onowing -- Po he isn't that and of a chump' tist chureb, her body was laid away to rce tlutionm unis passe!. viz: Thait the edelceates .~ - W can' t juin 111)o very f'a r, rest in tne c'emieter'y near the towvn. to Ii- unity conwnuant~t ta- insuuen'ttA to 09- liut by keeph'1i' everlastingly at Mrs. Gary was the widow of the late whi is th- y jaa i- we hopei to ge~tt part oft VOn r Lafayette G;ary and a daughter of the way tn iuw: nyeraevter isy learn itnythin:: Uneline4ss. late Thomas Willard of Liberty. She of tmeat'tan~tte'soterinag for eunice; I hat ited Vet. u figureU wi th y onl on1 leav'es three sisters, Mr's. Thonians G. 'e""h*" "ait. i'aeir airv~e'trneets are frre Voflp Frtilkier., H ay, Corn. Boggs, Mrs. Ella McCravey anid Mrs.- ,"fit" rr ""ze .iutctwritt~ it liI",) Flour, or any otheri supplies you F. it. McClanahan, all of Liberty, and Itav.e umo.re thuner on' cay that lie can spare to go neetl If we can \Ye will su vtc W. 0. W~illard of Greenville is a broth- , toJ~t icamasi'in~ mte'eting na he enni get a he~itL you some inioney. er. She leaves three children, all of l ide" t"r "nmt a c un whn buc ' ainn A young row for sale. A tlanta, Mi's. Thomas D. Bradley, I".at". ul'e'ie an -r iistr-a-c' t, ves.& r.,r t IBradley Gary and Theo. F". Gary. May ineneeite,te li prce'ent 'ampiaigut etin o r ,-' Giodicomfor~nt the berenved. teua ithey hthimtnt i- e. II. I. ii A d. t. ri CO Pli~cns,.Cj. FOR YOUR HEALTH'S SAKE! Screen your house before "Mr. Fly" gets the startlon you. W e have a nice assortment of ~'screen -doors and windows; also black and galvanized screen wire. Before buying look over our assiortment of Florence land Boss Oil Cook Stoves, Iee Cream Freezers and Water Coolers. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT! "Headquarters For the Best inHad re BAR~R BROTM 1ERS Phone 68 . LOOK FOR THE SAW SIGN EALYS.C Phone 8 thSIY,,S./ r mmm -.. rm